This is the footage which shows the British ambassador to Burma cutting off Boris Johnson's recitation of a colonial-era poem in the country's holiest site, in what has been labelled a “stunning” gaffe.
Visiting the Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon earlier this year, the Foreign Secretary began quoting the opening lines of Rudyard Kipling’s Mandalay.
The poem is written through the eyes of a retired British serviceman in Burma and also references kissing a local girl.
During the visit, after describing a golden Buddhist statue as a “very big guinea pig”, Mr Johnson burst into prose.
“The temple-bells they say … Come you back, you British soldier," the Foreign Secretary said.
Standing next to the ambassador, Andrew Patrick, Mr Johnson continued: “The wind is in the palm trees … the temple bells they say” – before Mr Patrick interjected.
"You're on mic,” Mr Patrick said, looking tense. “Probably not a good idea."
Mr Johnson replied: "What, The Road to Mandalay?"
“No,” the ambassador said, “not appropriate.”
The footage was shot by Channel 4 as part of a documentary on Mr Johnson’s fitness for Prime Ministerial office.
The Foreign and Commonwealth Office declined a request for comment from The Independent.
Mark Farmaner, director of the Burma Campaign UK, told the Guardian: “It is stunning he would do this there.
“There is a sensitivity about British colonialism and it is something that people in Burma are still resentful about. British colonial times were seen as a humiliation and an insult.”